The floods receded. The water dried up. But what remained most heavily on the children’s faces was not mud – it was emptiness.
A summer swallowed by storms, books were washed away, and the first day of school turned into… hours of crowding in evacuation centers with no desks, no blackboards, no teachers.
Then an athlete – no big donation boards, no PR team – drove from Chicago with a surprising “relief kit”: backpacks, textbooks, portable wifi, and a mini whiteboard.
Ian Happ and the “Mobile Classroom” Campaign
As an education enthusiast, Ian Happ could not sit still when he learned that thousands of children in the Texas flood zone were left behind due to lack of school supplies.
Without waiting for local authorities, he and the Happ Family Foundation took it upon themselves to design a “field school” model:
Each van was converted into a “mobile classroom,” with folding tables, mini boards, solar power outlets, and satellite internet connections.
Distributed 5,000 school backpacks, each containing waterproof textbooks, school supplies, and headphones for online learning.
Selected 30 volunteer teachers to follow the mobile school vans to teach in each evacuation area.
Not just “relief,” but restoring life chances
“I thought they were giving out instant noodles,” one resident recalled. “But he opened the car door and asked, ‘What grade is your kid in? Do you want to learn math or science first?’ I burst into tears.”
At an evacuation center in Beaumont, Ian Happ spent two days sitting on a folding chair, solving math problems for a fifth-grade boy who had lost his home and his dog in the floods. The boy asked, “Are you the one who played football?”
“Yes,” Happ laughed. “But today you helped me learn math to pass sixth grade.”
As a child, Ian Happ lost his father to cancer. “I don’t remember who comforted me then,” he said. “But I remember very clearly… who helped me study for my final exams.”
He understands that sometimes, what children need most is not a blanket, but someone to help them keep going.
While many people came to the flooded area to give rice and money, Ian Happ came to give the children back the belief that they were still moving towards the future.
Not in kind. But in lessons, in wifi, in a silent hug after a correct assignment.
And at the end of the day, when Happ closed the door of the last mobile school vehicle, people saw on the whiteboard only a neat line written by a 4th grade girl:
“Thank you for not leaving us standing still.”